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Posts Tagged ‘balance’

Energy Medicine

Friday, August 12th, 2011 by Karena

Fact: Anytime your body takes an action, muscularly or neurologically, there is an electric current causing that change.

An idea unaccepted by science at the beginning of the 20th century, but an idea so accepted now that we measure the body’s electricity to diagnosis and heal.  Ever had an electrocardiogram or ECG?  The ECG measures the heart’s electric pulses to determine if there is a problem.  Ever had electric stimulation in physical therapy? That’s an electric charge used to stimulate activity to an area of the body where the electric pulse may have become quiet due to injury. Restore the electric current and you restore health.

Fact: Anyplace there is an electric current, physiologically there is a resultant magnetic field.

A bit of science that has MEG’s (magnetoencephalograms) being used in place of EEG’s to study the brain’s magnetic fields.  Interestingly, the magnetic fields are able to pass through the tissue of the brain to the outside of the body undistorted for easier analysis, not the case when using the brain’s electrical current for diagnosis. In other magnetics, have you heard of an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging)?

So what?

Yeah, I heard you. Big words.  Little meaning.  Not so fast, Cowboy. The results of this work have implication in everything you do, especially healing.  If the body’s magnetic fields are :

  • Arriving outside your body undisturbed, and
  • We can see where a physical or neurological problem is through the analysis of those fields, then
  • Healing becomes a matter of manipulating those magnetic fields to create health.

Doctors prescribe magnet therapy for injuries that won’t heal (pulsed electric magnetic field therapy), for example.  But what about in terms of all forms of alternative therapy? If the goal is to manipulate the magnetic field then there becomes more than one way to do that.  James Oschman, PhD, has found the same magnetic field manipulation possible with many forms of healing; it doesn’t matter if it is massage, acupuncture, surgery, physical therapy or Pilates . All are manipulating the magnetic field.

Poses the question of which therapy is most effective? Well, it would be the one, that for you, creates the most change in the magnetic field.


I’ll leave you with this thought: The heart has the strongest electric current/field in the body and therefore the strongest magnetic field reaching outside the body.  While the electric field cannot be measured away from the body, the magnetic field can.  The heart’s magnetic field can be measured up to 15 feet away. Scientists assume that when their instruments become more sensitive that it will be considerably farther than that. Ever wonder why you can feel someone across a room?  Across a city? A country?  Ever wonder why coincidences can be so strong?  Yeah, I think that might be why.

Exercises for Better Balance

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010 by Karena

As promised on the National Osteoporosis Discussion Board here are two exercises that will improve your balance. When you have low bone density, better balance will greatly reduce fracture. It makes sense, right? The better balanced you are the less likely you are to fall. If you don’t fall, then your fracture risk is greatly reduced. Try these two balance exercises:

Picture 281. All Four’s Balance.

Does it makes sense to practice balance on all four’s when we are not exactly likely to fall in this position? Yes, it does makes sense because it makes your balance muscles fire. It makes those balance muscles more likely to fire and work correctly when you are in a standing position.

Here’s how it’s done.

Kneeling on all four’s, lift your right hand off the floor just 2-3 millimeters. Once balanced, keep the right hand lifted and now lift the left knee 2-3 millimeters. Keep in mind that 2-3 millimeters is VERY small. If someone were standing across the room watching you perform this exercise they might not be able to tell that you have moved at all. Now put the right hand and left knee down and pick up the alternate side. Each time you lift a hand and an arm, hold for three seconds.

2. Standing Balance.

Standing next to a support (the kitchen counter is great), place your right heel directly in from of your left toes. Slowly, try to let go of the counter and see if you can maintain your balance. Keep your hand close to the counter or support, though. You want to be able to grab the counter if you need the support. Try to build up to 30 seconds of balance and then change legs.

Good luck and let me know if you have any questions. Karena
p.s. Sorry for the sexy pic, but honestly, you should have seen the other options. This one is MILD.

Your Ageless Life™: Core Strength

Monday, October 26th, 2009 by Karena

Core Strength: No Sit-Ups, Please

 

 

There is nothing quite like having a bad back to make us look and feel a mere 40 years older than we really are. At least 80 million Americans have woken up feeling about 109-years-old as a result of disabling back pain. If you are one of the 80 million then your friends have probably already started dishing out the advice on how to fix your new mis-shapen, ‘Leaning Tower of Pisa-like’ posture.

You have undoubtedly heard this little tidbit: ‘Strengthen your Core!’ Your friends are right. And you dutifully take your gimpy back off to do your sit-ups… and this is where you are wrong.

Sit-ups only really focus (well) on one muscle: the rectus abdominis, and, there’s a heck of a lot more than one muscle making up the core muscles , or stabilizers, of the spine. Sit-ups and crunches when done correctly do strengthen the rectus but they are usually, normally, and most-often done incorrectly. Done incorrectly the only muscles that get stronger are the hip flexors which is too bad. It’s too bad because the hip flexors are generally an unhappy, tight, grouchy muscle in those living with back pain and doesn’t deserve to be traumatized this way. It’s also too bad that the rectus is getting so much attention, the attention needs to be divvied up. Imagine you have 10 children. Not one.

During muscle endurance tests those with a history of back pain prove themselves to have plenty of strength/endurance in their ability to hold a flexed position of the spine. They are even stronger in this flexed position than those who have never had back pain. It is the back extensors that are lacking and need the attention. (McGill, Low Back Disorders, 2002 p. 212) And by the way, in someone who has had a serious episode of back pain, this imbalance continues long after the episode of pain has passed, leaving one (read: YOU) open to another serious episode of back pain if the stabilizing muscles of the spine are not brought into balance and stabilized.

So what are the other muscles or tissues that stabilize the spine? They include the obliques, the transversus (yes, both still abdominal muscles), the quadratus lumborum, the intertransversarii, the rotatores, the thoraco-lumbar fascia, the muscles of the erector spinae and good ol’ multifidus. All of these muscles/tissues have a specific function to support the spine and they all need to be addressed when attempting to restore health to the spine. And as you may have already guessed they are not all activated with a sit-up or crunch. Here’s what activates them and makes them happy, smiling, willing-to-go-salsa-dancing-this-weekend muscles:

Planks are excellent exercises for strengthening the ‘corset’ of muscles around the spine. Side-bridging activates most of the core stabilizers of the spine. Balance exercises turn the propioceptive muscles back on. Your proprioceptive muscles are your intertransversarii and rotatores. It used to be thought they were responsible for movement on a very small scale but now evidence shows that they are really more about keeping you from falling on your nose; my words, not the words of these esteemed scientists who found that these muscles have a very high number of muscles spindles, approximately 4.5-7.3 times richer than multifidus: Nitz and Peck, 1986. When you turn to the right they activate on the left; when you stretch left they activate right; when you are standing on your right big toe trying to reach the last clean glass out of the cupboard they activate to keep you balanced (but don’t try going on the toenail, they aren’t that good).

This has been the hardest blog to write to date because without going on for another 50,000 words I have left a lot of information out. I am sure that you have picked up on the gaps but even I don’t want to hear myself talk anymore. I’ll be writing more about the core strength of the spine and if you have specific questions let me know and I’ll try to address them sooner than later.

Wishing you great health! Karena